Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/02/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]From both casual observations of pricing and personal experience, something in the R4 family may be be most economical way to try out the R system. The personal experience comes from the acquisition of an R4 outfit (body with 35/2.8 and 90/2.8 originally, 60/2.8 recetnly added) late last year. I personally regard the camera body in this case is just a support system for the lenses and am truly impressed with what's been coming out of the R glass. There was a discussion here a while back about problems inherent in the electronics of the early production run of the R4. You won't get a removeable prism with any R; that's why I'm keeping the Nikon F3 for copy work. And the flash sync is 1/100th which makes fill flash outdoors bothersome. You'll need 3-cam or R-cam lenses for the bodies you're contemplating. On 16 Feb 98 at 1:19, David Morton wrote: > I was thinking about giving the R series a try, but I'm not sure > which model to choose as an experiment. > > I don't want to spend too much money (I suspect I won't like the > fixed prism), so a new body is out of the question. > > I was wondering about the R4S. What do people recommend as a 'way > in'? > > *IF* I like it, I think I'd be heading off towards a pair of R6.2 or > R8 bodies. If this is the final destination, how many cams should my > lenses have? What's the difference between the R6 and the R6.2 and > what do R6 bodies sell for s/h? > > David Morton | Please don't tell my mother I'm a > journalist, > dmorton@journalist.co.uk | She thinks I have a respectable job > playing > (+44) 171 272 8908 | the piano in a brothel. > Roy C. Zartarian http://www.connix.com/~royzart "A prophet is not without honor except in his own land and among his own people" Written with the assistance of a labrador retriever whose chin is on the key board. All typos are his fault.